The Mekong River Agreement, 1995
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Transcript of The Mekong River Agreement, 1995
THE MEKONG RIVER AGREEMENT - 1995
Water Diplomacy
H2O (Water) – The need of life.
Some suggest if there will be a World war –III, it will be for water.
Requirement of peaceful settlement.
EXAMPLES Age old.
Treaty of Munich (1628) - control for thirty years the right bank of the Rhine River .
Treaty of Saigon (1862) – The Red River (Song Hong) was opened for trade as well as the ports of Hanoi, Haiphong, and Oui Nhon.
The Mekong River Also know as ‘Mother of Water’ and ‘The Nine Dragons River’
7th longest river in Asia and the 12th longest in the world
Is 4,200 km (2,610 mi) long
Riparians - China, Myanmar, Thailand, Laos, Cambodia and Vietnam
Primary uses - Irrigation, fisheries, power generation, transportation, industrial and domestic supply
Has annual commercial value of US$ 4-5 billion.
Has mineral deposit of tin, iron ore, natural gas, copper, gem stones, potash and gold
Hydrology of Mekong Has a drainage area of 795 000 km2
Yearly surplus of 475 000 million m3 (Cubic Meter) Release seasonal fluctuation is to the ratio as high as 50:1 between peak
and base flow Is also prone to soil erosion
Social Preface of the Basin Inhabited by about 100 different
ethnic groups
Have complex racial, linguistic and religious differences
They are mostly rural farmers/fishers, poor & lacking simple amenities
Population in the area has tripled in last half century
Due to high birth rate and low life expectancy, majority of the population is young.
Factors behind Negotiation Thailand
Water diversion for irrigation and other uses Hydro-electricity
Laos Hydropower, navigation, aquatic resource Impacts on agriculture and fishing, river bank erosion
Cambodia Aquatic resource, irrigation, possibly hydropower Change in flood plains, particularly in Tonle Sap flood pulse – impact on
agriculture and fishing Vietnam
Decreased dry season water flow; increasing salt water intrusion and negative impacts on irrigation
Foreign Relations & International Assistance
Riparian states wanted to avoid or resolve conflicts
Wanted facilitate cooperation in management and development of water resource
Need for cooperation in sectors like trade, migration, investment, fisheries, transpiration and disputed boundaries
Riaprians like Cambodia and Laos were very poor
All the riparians needed Foreign-Aid
Finances were from bilateral aid agencies and concessionary loan from development banks.
History of Negotiation The Mekong Committee 1957
The Mekong regime existed since 1957 in one form or the other
On September 17,1957 four riparians signed & established the committee for Coordination of investigation of Lower Mekong (Mekong Committee)
Based on the 1957 Economic Commission for Asian and the Far East ‘ECAFE’ study
Major support from the United Nations & United States
Mekong Regime collapsed due to “Communism Domino” in the river basin
“Interim Mekong Committee” of 1978 Was formed in 1978 following the cessation by Cambodia in 1975 Declared Functions
Prepare and approve plans for carrying out coordinated researches, studies, and investigation
Make requests on behalf of the participating governments for financial and technical assistance, and receive and administer such assistance
Employ on behalf of participating governments personnel to assist the IMC in the performance its functions
Draw up and recommend to participating governments criteria for use of the water of the Lower Mekong Basin for the purpose of water resources development
Funded by European Countries, Australia and Japan Would dissolve upon Cambodia's re-entry In 1992 Cambodia requested readmission and IMC dissolved Paved way for Mekong Agreement for Cooperation for the Sustainable
Development of the Mekong River basin 1995
Mekong River Agreement 1995 Known as Mekong Agreement for Cooperation for the Sustainable
Development of the Mekong River basin 1995
Negotiation efforts started in 1992 at Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia and carried on for 3 years
Thailand wanted China and Myanmar to be party
OMG – NO NO- Said the other riparian states
China backed out on its own , did not like frowning faces
There was disagreement over model framework, whether to carry on under the old Mekong Committee framework or negotiate a totally new structure
Riparians had three options
To amend the existing documents of 1957 statue & 1975 Declaration
To negotiate a completely new framework
To suspend cooperation and adhere to customary international water law
Thailand said – bloody communists and partial-communists, I am richer so agree to what I say
Said - Don’t want Cambodia to be a part, start a new model setup.
Deadlock was solved in 1992 by signing of a Memorandum of Understanding that made Cambodia an official party
Thailand even kicked the Mekong committee secretariat out of the negotiation unilaterally
Other said – Thailand should not have done it
So there was a chaos – Others started to poke their nose in it, saying we will help. Who? Asian Development Bank’s Greater Mekong Sub-region (ADB-GMS,
1992) Japan’s Forum of Comprehensive Development of Indochina (FCDI,
1993) The Quadripite Economic Cooperation (QEC, 1993) The Association of South East Asian Nations and Japan’s Ministry of
International Trade and Industry’s Working Group on Economic Cooperation in Indochina and Burma (AEM-MITI, 1994)- Couldn't they get a shorter name
Myanmar and Singapore’s ASEAN-Mekong Basin Development Cooperation (ASEAN-ME, 1996)
The Mekong regime was again about to collapse
UNDP got worried – why?
They had contributed $50 million over the years.
largest development program of longest duration that it had ever supported
What did UNDP do ? (Said come to papa)
Organized series of meetings to pacify the situation
Organized informal conciliation meeting Hong Kong
Offered to provide logistics, finances and mediation support
Eliminated the need for Secretariat’s involvement
“Joint Communiqué” was issued at Kuala Lumpur, establishing commitment to negotiate in good faith and Mekong Working Group (MWG)
Mekong Working Group Worked primarily on five elements
Asset of principles for sustainable utilization of water resources of the Mekong river system
An institutional structure and mechanism for coordination
A definition of the functions and responsibilities of the structure and mechanism
Future memberships of the structure
Management of the structure
A series of event during a period of 21 month led to negotiation and completion of initial draft of Agreement on 27 November 1994
Date and Events of Negotiation in-between the Riparian Countries: 6th October 1992 - Honk Kong: UNDP sponsored a consultation to discuss the
impasse and offer to assist as a neutral party 16-17 December 1992 - Kuala Lumpur: Meeting of four riparians &UNDP in
resulting in drafting a Joint Communiqué on a future framework of Mekong Cooperation for sustainable development of Mekong River by forming a Mekong Working Group (MWG), donors meeting of 1993 Mekong Secretariat work plan
4-5 February 1993 - Hanoi/MWG-I: Signed Joint Communiqué by Vice-Minister of each country, Adoption of Guideline for Working Group on the Future Framework of Mekong Cooperation, set target of end 1993 to complete MWG tasks, and approved the selection of Senior Advisor funded by UNDP
4-5 April 1993 - Bangkok/ MWG-II: Agreed to prepare national position papers on “principles” to govern future cooperation and begin examination of institutional framework
28-29 June 1993 - Vientiane/MWG-III: Agreed on “Outline” of draft Agreement, approving many provisions, and agreed to transform “outline” to draft at a Technical Drafting Meeting (TDM)
17-20 August 1993 - Bangkok/TDM-I: Refined draft agreement, approved many unresolved provisions and improved understanding on remaining key articles
7-8 October 1993 - Phnom Penh/MWG-IV: Agreed to several remaining provisions, enhanced understanding of position and agreed of finalization efforts
6-7 January 1994 - Vientiane/TDM-II: Examined option to reasonable and equitable utilization of mainstream and tributary water, and trans-mountain diversions
27-29 November 1994 - Hanoi/ MWG-V: The four countries, through their MWG, mutually agreed on the text of draft agreement and “initialed” the Draft Agreement signifying the completion of MWG mandate. They then agreed to for the Mekong task Force (MTF) to examine transitional for making preparation for the official signing on the new agreement and start-up needs for the new Mekong River Commission
Conclusion The greater is the international involvement in conflict resolution, the greater
the political and financial incentives prevail to cooperate
Building effective organizations and policies requires more than just sufficient technical and financial support, but also real political commitment from the government of the member countries
Solving water-related issues involves both technical and social aspects of development and understanding coupled with patience
(Thank you)
Laos- ຂອບໃຈຫລາຍໆ (khàwp ja̖i lãi lãi)Thailand – ขอบคณุมาก(khàwp khun mâak)
Vietnam- Cảm ơn ôngCambodia - ឣរគុណ (aw kohn)
------------------------------Nishant Choudhary
LL.M.(2011) George Washington University